Thornham
 
BOOM IN WOODLARKS PROMPTS RETURN TO FARMLAND

16th July 2007

Woodlarks are returning to breed on England’s farmland in greater numbers than at any time in the last 40 years.
 
A national survey has found woodlark numbers in the UK have risen by 89 per cent in the last 10 years, though the picture in Eastern England is more mixed.
The rise has been driven by work to provide suitable habitat – improvements to the size and condition of lowland heaths and good management of forestry plantations.
 
Increasing numbers of the birds now appear to be moving on to farms to breed, with many nesting on set-aside land.
 
There are fears however that the imminent loss of set-aside, because of changes in the way Europe pays its farmers, could limit the woodlark's spread unless suitable alternatives are provided.

The results of the survey, carried out in 2006 by the BTO, RSPB, Natural England and the Forestry Commission (England) and released today, show an estimated 3,084 breeding pairs of woodlarks, compared with 1,633 pairs in 1997 and the low point of just 241 pairs in 1986.
Counts of woodlark territories [note 1] show that Suffolk, Norfolk and Lincolnshire are hugely important with a combined total of 668 pairs – 38 per cent of England’s woodlarks. More than half of these – 364 pairs – were in Breckland, in Suffolk and Norfolk. Other concentrations were on the Sandlings heaths near the Suffolk coast and the Laughton Forest area of Lincolnshire.
Suffolk, with 370 pairs, remains the single most important county for the species in the UK. However, contrary to the national trend, numbers dropped by 87 pairs (19 per cent) overall. Much of this is accounted for by fewer in the Suffolk coastal forest (from 113 pairs to 16 pairs), though offset by an increase in the population on heathland (up from 70 to 111 pairs) and on farmland, including set-aside (from 17 to 41).

Numbers there shot up when much of the Suffolk coastal forests were blown down and cleared in the great storm of 1987. This created large area of ‘clear-fell’, a favoured woodlark habitat, and coincided with a big effort for the improved management of the Suffolk Sandlings heaths that has also benefited woodlarks.

Numbers of woodlarks in Norfolk are more-or-less unchanged over the period (248 pairs in 1997, 249 pairs in 2006), with a small decrease in Breckland offset by increases in north Norfolk.
Traditionally a bird of heathland, farmland and more recently forest plantations, the woodlark was red-listed as a species of conservation concern in the 1980s because of a drastic decline in its range over the preceding 20 years.

Much of the decline coincided with the loss of traditional, mixed farmland in the south west and Wales, along with the loss of heathland habitat throughout the UK. While today, the bird’s strongholds remain England’s lowland heaths and forestry plantations, where they thrive in clear felled areas, farmland is becoming increasingly important once again. This latest survey shows how set-aside has tempted a proportion of the UK’s burgeoning woodlark population to return to farmland.
Simon Wotton, research biologist at the RSPB, said: “About 21 per cent of the birds we surveyed were on farmland and other grassland habitats, of which about 7 per cent was set-aside.
“It seems woodlarks are moving on to this land from nearby heaths and from forest plantations.” 
Greg Conway, Research Ecologist at the BTO, who organised the survey said:
"It is marvellous to see that the breeding population has almost doubled since 1997 and the range has increased considerably, with large leaps to the west and north. This survey would not have been possible without the support of hundreds of birdwatchers, to whom we are all extremely grateful".

Set-aside was introduced in 1992 with the aim of taking land out of production to reduce the EU’s infamous grain mountains.The move proved an accidental boon to wildlife, including many birds, by providing a source of food in the winter and somewhere to nest free from disturbance.
Recent changes to the way subsidies are paid to Europe’s farmers now seem to have made set-aside redundant and it is likely to be abolished by the European Commission next year.
Sue Armstrong-Brown, the RSPB’s head of countryside conservation, said: “The return of the woodlark to our fields, heaths and forests is brilliant news – and shows how important set-aside has become as a refuge for wildlife on our farmland.
“The crucial thing now is to keep the environmental benefits when the policy is updated. Birds like the woodlark are trying hard to adapt to the new ways of managing the countryside and we must not sabotage their recovery.
“We must increase our efforts to restore and manage lowland heaths to create suitable conditions for the woodlark and also ensure that the management of forestry plantations provides suitable breeding habitat.”

Natural England’s senior ornithologist Allan Drewitt, added: “It is encouraging to see such a dramatic increase in the numbers and breeding range of woodlarks. This  largely the result of improvements to their lowland heathland habitats by conservation bodies including Natural England, the RSPB and local wildlife trusts, and the efforts of the Forestry Commission in providing and maintaining suitable nesting areas in their plantations.
“The £25m Heritage Lottery funding of Tomorrow’s Heathland Heritage has done a lot to help heathland species like the woodlark.
“We must now increase our efforts to restore and manage lowland heaths for the woodlark and other wildlife, and also ensure that the management of forestry plantations continues to provide breeding habitats."

Forestry Commission ecologist Jonathan Spencer, said: “It is good news that the forest habitats and heathland creation we have developed in key areas have supported the woodlark population, enabling them to increase and return to more traditional habitats.
“We are committed to working closely with partners such as the RSPB to support priority species, and for survey results like this to help guide us in our woodland and habitat management.”